Old Feather Store

{{short description|Shop in Boston, Massachusetts, United States}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}}

{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}

Image:OldFeatherStore Boston 19thc.jpg

The Old Feather Store (1680–1860) was a shop located at Dock Square and North Street (formerly Ann Street) in Boston, Massachusetts, in the 17th–19th centuries. It was also called the Old Cocked Hat.Memorial History of Boston. 1880. Built in 1680 by Thomas Stanbury, it was demolished in 1860.Albert William Mann. Walks & talks about historic Boston. The Mann publishing co., 1917; p.117.Michael Holleran. Boston's changeful times: origins of preservation and planning in America. 1998; p.89.

Brief history

Through the years the building had several successive owners and was used for varying commercial purposes. William Antram made hats, c. 1708. John Greenleaf ran an apothecary, 1766–1778. Samuel Wallis sold goods from West India, c. 1789. Samuel Richards sold hardware, c. 1789, as did Jonathan Phillips, c. 1803. Beginning in 1806, Daniel Pomeroy, John K. Simpson, Daniel P. Simpson, and William B. Simpson sold feathers. Charles Lovejoy sold clothes, c. 1806. William Tileston conducted business in the indigo trade, c. 1809.{{Citation |publisher = Printed by request of the City Council |location = Boston |title = A topographical and historical description of Boston |author = Nathaniel Bradstreet Shurtleff |authorlink=Nathaniel B. Shurtleff |date = 1871 |oclc = 4422090 |ol = 24156405M }}

Its timber-frame architecture featured multi-level gables, and facades embedded with glass. A contemporary observer described its appearance in the mid-19th century, prior to its demolition:

The outside of the building was covered with a strong, and, as time has proved, durable cement, in which was observable coarse gravel and broken glass, the latter consisting of fragments of dark-colored junk bottles. At the upper part of the principle gable on the Dock square front the date of the time of erecting the building, 1680, was distinctly impressed into the rough-cast cement in Arabic figures, together with various ornamental devices.

The "cement" material was called "roughcast" and was a well-known material in England used to cover the exterior of buildings. Roughcast was a suggested building covering after the great Boston fire of 1679, as it was less likely to catch fire than clapboards, which were used on many buildings due to their lower cost and the lack of a lime source in New England. Please see Roughcast.

References

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Further reading

  • Edward Griffin Porter. Rambles in old Boston, New England. Cupples, Upham and company, 1887.
  • Abbott Lowell Cummings. The Old Feather Store in Boston. Old-time New England v.48, 1958.
  • Old Boston in early photographs, 1850–1918: 174 prints from the collection of the Bostonian Society. Courier Dover Publications, 1990.
  • D. Brenton Simons. Boston Beheld: Antique Town and Country Views. UPNE, 2008.

Images

Image:1839 FeatherStore Boston MFABoston.png|Drawing by unknown artist, 1839

Image:OldFeatherStore ca1841 Boston.png|From: Buckingham's America, 1841

Image:Eduard Hildebrandt Boston.jpg|Painting by Eduard Hildebrandt, 1844

Image:FeatherStore Ballous1855.JPG|From: Ballou's Pictorial, 1855

Image:Old Feather Store2.jpg|Stereograph, 19th century

Image:DockSquare byPrang NMAH2003-32006.jpg|Print by Louis Prang & Co., 1860

Image:CockedHat 1873 OurYoungFolks.png|From: Our Young Folks, 1873

Image:FeatherStore Boston.png|From: Walks & Talks About Historic Boston, 1917

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Category:Demolished buildings and structures in Boston

Category:Buildings and structures completed in 1680

Category:Economic history of Boston

Category:Government Center, Boston

Category:1680 establishments in the Massachusetts Bay Colony

Category:Buildings and structures demolished in 1860